6,082 research outputs found

    Influence of Mg, Ag and Al substitutions on the magnetic excitations in the triangular-lattice antiferromagnet CuCrO2

    Full text link
    Magnetic excitations in CuCrO2_{2}, CuCr0.97_{0.97}Mg0.03_{0.03}O2_{2}, Cu0.85_{0.85}Ag0.15_{0.15}CrO2_{2}, and CuCr0.85_{0.85}Al0.15_{0.15}O2_{2} have been studied by powder inelastic neutron scattering to elucidate the element substitution effects on the spin dynamics in the Heisenberg triangular-lattice antiferromagnet CuCrO2_{2}. The magnetic excitations in CuCr0.97_{0.97}Mg0.03_{0.03}O2_{2} consist of a dispersive component and a flat component. Though this feature is apparently similar to CuCrO2_{2}, the energy structure of the excitation spectrum shows some difference from that in CuCrO2_{2}. On the other hand, in Cu0.85_{0.85}Ag0.15_{0.15}CrO2_{2} and CuCr0.85_{0.85}Al0.15_{0.15}O2_{2} the flat components are much reduced, the low-energy parts of the excitation spectra become intense, and additional low-energy diffusive spin fluctuations are induced. We argued the origins of these changes in the magnetic excitations are ascribed to effects of the doped holes or change of the dimensionality in the magnetic correlations.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figure

    Molecular kinetic analysis of a finite-time Carnot cycle

    Full text link
    We study the efficiency at the maximal power ηmax\eta_\mathrm{max} of a finite-time Carnot cycle of a weakly interacting gas which we can reagard as a nearly ideal gas. In several systems interacting with the hot and cold reservoirs of the temperatures ThT_\mathrm{h} and TcT_\mathrm{c}, respectively, it is known that ηmax=1Tc/Th\eta_\mathrm{max}=1-\sqrt{T_\mathrm{c}/T_\mathrm{h}} which is often called the Curzon-Ahlborn (CA) efficiency ηCA\eta_\mathrm{CA}. For the first time numerical experiments to verify the validity of ηCA\eta_\mathrm{CA} are performed by means of molecular dynamics simulations and reveal that our ηmax\eta_\mathrm{max} does not always agree with ηCA\eta_\mathrm{CA}, but approaches ηCA\eta_\mathrm{CA} in the limit of TcThT_\mathrm{c} \to T_\mathrm{h}. Our molecular kinetic analysis explains the above facts theoretically by using only elementary arithmetic.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure

    Observables and Correlation Functions in OSp Invariant String Field Theory

    Get PDF
    We define BRST invariant observables in the OSp invariant closed string field theory for bosonic strings. We evaluate correlation functions of these observables and show that the S-matrix elements derived from them coincide with those of the light-cone gauge string field theory.Comment: 23 page

    Super-critical Accretion Flows around Black Holes: Two-dimensional, Radiation-pressure-dominated Disks with Photon-trapping

    Full text link
    The quasi-steady structure of super-critical accretion flows around a black hole is studied based on the two-dimensional radiation-hydrodynamical (2D-RHD) simulations. The super-critical flow is composed of two parts: the disk region and the outflow regions above and below the disk. Within the disk region the circular motion as well as the patchy density structure are observed, which is caused by Kelvin-Helmholtz instability and probably by convection. The mass-accretion rate decreases inward, roughly in proportion to the radius, and the remaining part of the disk material leaves the disk to form outflow because of strong radiation pressure force. We confirm that photon trapping plays an important role within the disk. Thus, matter can fall onto the black hole at a rate exceeding the Eddington rate. The emission is highly anisotropic and moderately collimated so that the apparent luminosity can exceed the Eddington luminosity by a factor of a few in the face-on view. The mass-accretion rate onto the black hole increases with increase of the absorption opacity (metalicity) of the accreting matter. This implies that the black hole tends to grow up faster in the metal rich regions as in starburst galaxies or star-forming regions.Comment: 16 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ (Volume 628, July 20, 2005 issue

    Exploring Galaxy Evolution from Infrared Number Counts and Cosmic Infrared Background

    Get PDF
    Recently reported infrared (IR) galaxy number counts and cosmic infrared background (CIRB) all suggest that galaxies have experienced a strong evolution sometime in their lifetime. We statistically estimate the galaxy evolution history from these data. We find that an order of magnitude increase of the far-infrared (FIR) luminosity at redshift z = 0.5 - 1.0 is necessary to reproduce the very high CIRB intensity at 140 um reported by Hauser et al. (1998). z \sim 0.75 and decreases to, even at most, a factor of 10 toward z \sim 5, though many variants are allowed within these constraints. This evolution history also satisfies the constraints from the galaxy number counts obtained by IRAS, ISO and, roughly, SCUBA. The rapid evolution of the comoving IR luminosity density required from the CIRB well reproduces the very steep slope of galaxy number counts obtained by ISO. We also estimate the cosmic star formation history (SFH) from the obtained FIR luminosity density, considering the effect of the metal enrichment in galaxies. The derived SFH increases steeply with redshift in 0 0.75. This is consistent with the SFH estimated from the reported ultraviolet luminosity density. In addition, we present the performance of the Japanese ASTRO-F FIR galaxy survey. We show the expected number counts in the survey. We also evaluate how large a sky area is necessary to derive a secure information of galaxy evolution up to z \sim 1 from the survey, and find that at least 50 - 300 deg^2 is required.Comment: 18 pages LaTeX, PASJ in press. Abstract abridge

    Performance Measurements of 8-Gsps 1-bit ADCs Developed for Wideband Radio Astronomical Observations

    Full text link
    8-Gsps 1-bit Analog-to-Digital Converters (ADCs) were newly developed toward the realization of the wideband observation. The development of the wideband ADCs is one of the most essential developments for the radio interferometer. To evaluate its performance in interferometric observations, the time (phase) stability and frequency response were measured with a noise source and a signal generator. The results of these measurements show that the developed ADCs can achieve the jitter time less than 0.05 psec at the time interval of 1 sec, the passband frequency response with the slope less than 0.73 dB/GHz and the ripple less than 1.8 dB, and the aperture time less than 20 psec. The details of the developed ADC design, the measurement methods, and the results of these measurements are presented in this paper.Comment: Accepted for publication in PASJ. 19 pages, 15 figure
    corecore